Voters play a large role in the election process, therefore their participation and knowledge can determine a lot. Many voters are participating less as the elections go on, due to not being fully informed or educated. “About one-half the eligible electorate does not participate in presidential elections, and turnout for local elections is much lower than that” (Hall, J. S. & Jones, P. M.). With turnouts as low as they are the younger generations are even more reluctant to register to vote let alone play a part in the actual elections. The lowest registration turnouts are beginning with the eighteen to twenty-four year old groups (Hall, J. S. & Jones, P. M.).
The decline in both education and the amount of voters in elections is starting to affect the political world. Looking for the explanation of why the voter turnouts are so low and how it can be changed will be examined within this
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Kids Voting USA was a program where kids would go with their parents to vote, learn the process, become interested, and want to learn more. Eventually, Kids Voting USA became a national nonprofit program in 1991 (Hall, J. S. & Jones, P. M.). Their idea was that having kids tag along with their parents to vote would change the future participation of their generation in voting. Along with voting with their parents the program provides packets with readings on the candidates, and current issues. The children who participated in Kids Voting USA later gave responses that showed that “75 percent reported watching broadcasts about elections on television, 49 percent reported reading about the election in newspapers, and 29 percent read about elections in magazines. More important, 60-70 percent of the children said they went home and asked their parents about the election” (Hall, J. S. & Jones, P.
Since 1972, youth voter turnout has been on the decline. According to the Child Trends Databank, 50 percent of Americans aged 18 to 24 participated in the 1972 presidential election (2015). Nearly three decades later, the percentage of young adults aged 18 to 24 who voted in the 2000 presidential election had dropped eighteen
This shows that the perspective of the reluctant new voters represent that when given the power to vote, many are uneducated in what to look for when deciding what to vote for. In fact, the more education one has, the more they choose to vote. Compulsory voting would force teenagers who know they still have more to learn on the subject to make quick decisions. “You might as well urge the unpracticed to use power tools or Rollerblade” (Doc G).
There are many factors that have led to a culture of low voter turnout in the State of Texas. For example, Texas being a poor state with an uneven distribution of wealthy plays an important role. According to the text book, “the poverty rate is important because the poor and less educated, in the absence of strong parties to persuade them to go to the polls on Election Day, have a tendency to stay home”. Because the poverty rate is so high, it makes a big difference on voter turnout when the poor don’t
I believe that the low voter turnout in most elections is appalling. Why do people want to willingly give up their voice in our governmental system? Fewer than 37% of all eligible voters actually cast a ballot in the last presidential election. Many claim ignorance of political issues, but I believe that must stem from laziness. If people would
“From 1972 to 2012, citizens 18-29 turned out at a rate 15 to 20 points lower than citizens 30 years older” from this data we can conclude that age is a demographic that affects voter turnout (What Affects Voter Turnout). Voting laws such as those of identification or registration impact voter turnout. For example, the introduction of early voting was meant to increase voter turnout, but has in fact decreased turnout (What Affects Voter Turnout). In response to the argument that the system lowers voter turnout rate, one should take the many other variables that contribute to turnout into account.
Traditionally people aged 30 to 65 years old are considered to be politically active and more likely to vote during the presidential and/or local elections. People of this age group, are most likely to own their homes, have established careers, and are apart of stable communities. As America’s stable age group, “the voters’ turnout rate is around 70 percent” (). Compared to the 30 to 60 something, the younger people are substantially less likely to vote in either the presidential and/or local elections. However, in recent years, due to the influence of social
This refers to the process of casting one’s vote through the use of technology. Kiosk internet voting is an option, wherein kiosks with computers are setup at specific locations and supervised by the election authorities (Goodman et. al., 2016). Such voting patterns make the process simpler and more efficient for the electorates. Scholars suggest online behaviour of present day youth makes a potent case for introduction of electronic voting in Canadian elections (Goodman et. al., 2016). This will increase the number of points, through which a voter can exercise his or her choice and make them more willing and participative in the
As politics and government becomes more complex and involved, more effort is required to keep up with and understand it. As a result, many Americans have lost touch with current events and happenings. Therefore, when election time rolls around, many people lack enough information to develop an educated opinion and support a candidate with their vote, so they just do not vote at all. This lack of information is also related to the belief that one vote will not matter. People believe that their vote will not count, and are therefore following the news less and becoming out of touch with public affairs and politics (Is the System Broken?”). This lack of information is also more strongly apparent among the younger voting population. When interviewed
Being able to cast my first vote in the 21st century is a privilege. My generation needs to accept their patriotic responsibility and vote because many reforms are needed in order to carry us into the new millennium. Voting reforms are necessary to inspire political participation for other modifications and adjustments needed in areas such as health care, education, and Social Security, all which we as young people will face in the future. Participation in elections is necessary to facilitate and enable progress, but our present day system of voting is expiring by frustrated Americans.
The U.S Constitution gives the states considerable latitude in the way of conducting elections. The American citizens have many opportunities to vote. However, a turnout in American elections has dramatically decreased over the past several decades. In order to address this issue, majority of states have allowed absentee voting reforms. These convenient reforms are thought to increase the voter turnout in the elections, as well as to reduce administrative costs.
“On the one hand, turnout among 16- and 17-year-olds was about 10 percentage points below overall turnout. On the other hand, 16- and 17-year-olds were more likely to vote than those aged 18 to 34. The same trend is evident elsewhere too. In Austria – the only European state with votes at 16 for national elections – this age bracket votes less than the entire population but more than the subsequent bracket.” (Alan Renwick and Barney McCay 2015). Politics as a standalone subject would encourage more participation as the combination of lessons about policy, media and up-to-date current affairs would personally relate to the individuals such as parents being fined for truancy, free school meals etc.
Voter turnout, as well as election results, depend upon and are effected by several different factors. Everything from family status to beliefs about abortion can determine how a person will vote. In my presentation, however, I focused on three aspects that effect voter turnout and elections. I found, in my research, that a voter's age, sex and party identification greatly factor into how a person will cast his or her vote.
Unlike parties in many other countries, political parties in the U.S. are relatively weak in terms of their ability to mobilize voters to register and ultimately vote on election- day. This inability to mobilize voters has direct correlation to the fact that membership and affiliation in political
Political inactivity on the part of young Americans stems from one fundamental source -- a general cynicism of the American political process. This disdain for politics is further perpetuated by a lack of voter education and a needlessly archaic voting procedure that creates barriers to voting where they need not exist. While many of these existing problems can be rectified with relative ease through the implementation of programs such as Internet voting and better voter education, such programs create only a partial solution.
Voting has not always been as easy as it is today. It is interesting to examine how far America has progressed in its process of allowing different types of people to be able to vote. Voting was once aimed at a particular group of people, which were white males that owned their own property. Today, most people over the age of eighteen can vote, except for the mentally incompetent or people who have been convicted of major felonies in some states. The decline of voter participation has always been a debate in the public arena. According to McDonald and Popkin, it is “the most important, most familiar, most analyzed, and most conjectured trend in recent American political history (2001, 963)” The question is, how important is voter